Trending News
News
News
Global Fertility Research Alliance
Illumina today announced the formation of the Global Fertility Alliance, a new collaboration to advance excellence in fertility technologies and processes within the assisted reproductive treatment laboratory.
News
A New Role for Zebrafish: Larger Scale Gene Function Studies
A relatively new method of targeting specific DNA sequences in zebrafish could dramatically accelerate the discovery of gene function and the identification of disease genes in humans.
News
Autologous stem cell therapy is helpful in traumatic brain injury
Therapy reduced interventions needed to keep pediatric patients out of danger zone.
News
Strokes steal 8 years' worth of brain function, new study suggests
Having a stroke ages a person’s brain function by almost eight years, new research finds – robbing them of memory and thinking speed as measured on cognitive tests.
News
PMC Board Continues to Cultivate Leadership from Across Health Care System
Appointments afford additional representation for both diagnostic, therapeutic communities.
News
Pivotal Results from Phase III Trial
Show combination of ipilimumab and nivolumab or nivolumab alone increase progression-free survival in advanced melanoma patients.
News
This Week on NeuroScientistNews: 1 June – 5 June
Visual system plasticity; new link between the brain and immune system; the genetic basis of laughing, and more.
News
An initiation mechanism for dendritic spines discovered
Researchers from the University of Helsinki, ETH Zürich, Aix-Marseille and the German Mouse Clinic teamed up to investigate the initiation process of dendritic spines. They discovered that protein called MIM bends the plasma membrane to aid the formation of dendritic spines from the surface of the neuronal dendrite.
News
Study links delay of gratification to how brain structures are connected
The ability to delay gratification in chimpanzees is linked to how specific structures of the brain are connected and communicate with each other, according to researchers at Georgia State University and Kennesaw State University.
News
Silencing the Biological Clock
A protein associated with many kinds of cancer cells was found to suppress the circadian clock, with implications for cancer biology and the workings of the clock itself.
Advertisement